Behaviourist approch

Cards (12)

  • Behaviourist approach: only concerned with studying behaviour that can be observed and measured - its not concerned with mental processes of the mind - introspection was rejected by behaviourists as its concepts were vague and difficult to measure
  • behaviourist approach - controlled lab studies: tried to maintain more control and objectivity within their research and relied on lab studies to achieve this
  • behaviourists - use of non-human animals: they suggest the process that govern learning are the same in all species so animals can replace humans as experimental subjects
  • classical conditioning (Pavolvs research) - learning by association:
    before conditioning: unconditioned stimulus = unconditioned response
    no stimulus = no response
    during conditioning: neutral stimulus and unconditioned stimulus paried
    after conditioning: conditioned stimulus = conditioned response
  • Pavlovs research (classical conditioning): conditioning dogs to salivate when a bell rings:
    before conditioning: UCS=food/ UCR=salivation/ NS=bell
    during conditioning: bell and food occur at the same time
    after conditioning: CS=bell/ CR=salivation
  • operant conditioning: refers to learning as an active process whereby humans and animals operate on their environment - behaviour is shaped and maintained by its consequences
  • Operant conditioning (Skinners research) - rats and pigeons in specially designed cages (Skinner boxes)
    When a rat activated a lever, it was rewarded with food pellet
    A desirable consequence led to behaviour being repeated
    If pressing an animal avoided an electric shock will be repeated
  • 3 types of behaviour (operant conditioning)
    • positive reinforcement: receiving reward when behaviour is performed (increases likelihood of behaviour repeating)
    • negative reinforcement: avoiding something unpleasant when behaviour is performed (increases likelihood of behaviour repeating)
    • punishment: unpleasant consequence is performed (decreases likelihood of behaviour repeating)
  • strength: behaviourism it uses well-controlled research - the approach has focused on the careful measurement of observable behaviour within controlled lab settings - behaviourists have broken behaviour down into stimulus - response units and studied causal relationships - this suggests that behaviourist experiments have scientific credibility
  • counter-argument of behaviourism using well controlled research: however, this approach my oversimplify learning and ignore important influences on behaviour (thoughts). other approaches (social learning theory and cognitive) incorporate mental processes - this suggests learning is more complex than what we can observe
  • one strength is behaviourist laws of learning have real-world application: principles of conditioning have been applied to a broad range of real-world behaviours and problems. token economy systems reward inappropriate behaviour w/ tokens that are exchanged for privileges (operant conditioning) - successfully used in prisons and psychiatric wards - this increases value of the behaviourist approach because it has widespread application
  • one limitation is behaviourism is a form of environmental determinism - the approach sees all behaviour as determined by past experiences that have been conditioned and ignores any influence that free will may have on behaviour - Skinner suggested that free will was an illusion, our past conditioning determines our outcome - this is an extreme position and ignores influence of conscious decision making processes on behaviour (as suggested by the cognitive approach)